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Proxy Configuration covers the following topics:
The Java Control Panel provides four proxy options via the Network Setting subpanel:
If "Use browser settings" is selected, then proxy information is entered entirely through the browser. For Internet Explorer, go to Tools>Internet Options ... and select the Connections tab and then LAN Settings ... ; for Netscape, go to Edit>Preferences ... and select Advanced under Category and then Proxies. How this works and the three types of connections that can be set up through the browser—Direct, Manual, and Automatic—are described in the following sections.
If you select "Use proxy server" in the Java Control Panel, you have two choices here:
If you select "Use automatic proxy configuration
script", then you must enter the URL for the location of the
JavaScript called FindProxyForURL(URL url)
that
returns the proxy server to be used for a URL. Support for this
script is the same as described below under Automatic Proxy
Configuration.
Direct connection does not use a proxy. For certain situations, such as when mobile users connect to the company through a modem, direct connection to the intranet environment is required, and proxies should not be used in these cases.
Because browsers on different platforms store proxy information differently, there is no generic mechanism to obtain proxy information. Here's how proxy information is obtained for two different browser-platform combinations:
Microsoft Internet Explorer: Internet Explorer
stores proxy information in the same set of keys in the windows
registry. Java Plug-in and
Java Web Start extract this information directly from the
registry.
Mozilla: Mozilla stores proxy information in a preference file under the user profile directory on the local machine. Mozilla also has public APIs available for determining proxy information. Java Plug-in uses the Mozilla public APIs to obtain the proxy information; Java Web Start obtains the proxy information through reading and parsing the preference file.
Netscape Navigator: Navigator stores proxy information in a preference file under the user profile directory on the local machine. Java Plug-in and Java Web Start read and parse this file to obtain the proxy information.
Java Plug-in and Java Web Start obtain proxy information at startup time. If you change the proxy settings after Java Plug-in or Java Web Start have started, you may force reloading of the proxy information from the browser through the p option in the Java Console. Java Web Start is restarted for each application, so new proxy information will be used automatically on subsequent launches.
Internet Explorer: Java Plug-in and Java Web Start recognize and supports the proxy server and port setting associated with the protocol. IE supports various syntaxes in the proxy server bypass list, as follows:
For example, if you specify "121.141.23.5;*.eng;http://*.com" in the proxy server bypass list, then the browser bypasses the proxy whenever one of the following occurs:
Currently Java Plug-in and Java Web Start support the first two syntaxes in the proxy server bypass list in IE. IE also supports bypassing the proxy server for local (intranet) addresses without using the proxy server bypass list. Java Plug-in and Java Web Start support this option by bypassing the proxy server if the URL hostname is plain; i.e., the hostname contains no dot (.).
Mozilla and Netscape Navigator: Java Plug-in and Java Web Start recognize and supports the proxy server and port setting associated with the protocol. For example, if you specify ".eng,.sun.com" in the proxy server bypass list in Mozilla , it bypasses the proxy whenever the URL hostname ends with ".eng" or ".sun.com". Java Plug-in and Java Web Start fully support this syntax in the proxy server bypass list in Mozilla and Navigator.
For more information about manual proxy configuration in your browser, consult the user guide for your browser.
Automatic proxy configuration is supported in the browser by setting a particular URL that contains a JavaScript file with .pac or .js extension. This file contains a function called FindProxyForURL that contains the logic to determine which proxy server to use when the browser receives a connection request. This function is written by the system administrator for the particular intranet environment. When the browser starts up, it recognizes the URL of the JavaScript file and downloads the file to the local machine using direct connection. Then whenever it needs to make a new connection, the browser executes the JavaScript function FindProxyForURL in the file to obtain the proxy information to set up the connection.
Internet Explorer: During startup, Java Plug-in
downloads the JavaScript file to the local machine using direct
connection. Then whenever it needs to make a new connection, it
executes the FindProxyForURL
function to obtain the
proxy information using the JavaScript engine in Internet
Explorer.
Mozilla/Netscape Navigator: During startup,
Java Plug-in downloads the JavaScript file to the local machine
using direct connection. Then
whenever it needs to make a new connection, it executes the
FindProxyForURL
function to obtain the proxy
information by using the JavaScript engine in
Mozilla/Navigator.
Windows: During startup, Java Web Start
downloads the JavaScript file to the local machine using direct
connection. Then whenever it needs to make a new connection, it
executes the FindProxyForURL
function to obtain the
proxy information using the JavaScript engine in Internet
Explorer.
Linux/Solaris: During startup, Java Web Start
downloads the JavaScript file to the local machine using direct
connection. Then whenever it needs to make a new connection, it
will parse the FindProxyForURL
function and try its
best guess to obtain the proxy information.
Notes on FindProxyForURLGiven a JavaScript engine, the following is applicable to Java Plug-in on all platforms and to Java Web Start on Windows only.
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For more information about automatic proxy configuration in your browser, consult the user guide for your browser.
java.net.ProxySelector
API in J2SE
5.0Developers may sometimes need to determine the proxy
configuration of a given host. By knowing the proxy configuration
they can write more intelligent code to connect to the host through
the proper proxy server. In J2SE 5.0, java.net.ProxySelector
is a new API for proxy configuration support. Here is a simple code
example:
private Proxy findProxy(URI uri)
{
try
{
ProxySelector selector = ProxySelector.getDefault();
List<Proxy> proxyList = selector.select(uri);
if (proxyList.size() > 1)
return proxyList.get(0);
}
catch (IllegalArgumentException e)
{
}
return Proxy.NO_PROXY;
}
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